CALIFORNIA ROSES, INC. 
Beds of Tea Roses 
LUCILLE RAND. Ve ry double (Tower of bright rose-carmine, 
touched with gold at base of petals. 
MISS ROWENA THOM. A great big flower on a big, bushy 
plant. Descended from Radiance and Los Angeles, it combines 
the best characteristics of both, with large, finely formed flowers 
of rosy mauve with an old-gold base. Fragrant and always in 
bloom. 
MME. BUTTERFLY. An Ophelia sport—a marked improvement. 
Fine light pink buds and flowers of exquisite shape, tinted with 
gold near base of petals. Richly perfumed. Greenhouse foliage 
grown out-of-doors; very few thorns. 
MRS. A. R. BARRACLOUGH. One of the finest exhibition Roses. 
Very large, long-pointed buds. Extremely large and lasting 
flowers of illuminated soft sparkling carmine-pink, richly shaded 
with yellow and gold at the base. 
MRS. HENRY BOWLES. Not a particularly free bloomer but a 
most beautiful flower of a deep warm shade of pink flushed 
salmon. Every bloom is perfect. 
ROSE MARIE. A lovely old Rose of clear rose-pink with splendid 
form and plant of medium growth. 
SALMON-PINK 
COUNTESS VANDAL. (M. Leenders & Co., 1932.) Plant Patent 
No. 38. Exquisite flowers of flame-pink and salmon with 
bronzy shades—two-tone effect. Form resembles Los Angeles. 
$1.00 each. 
EDITH NELLIE PERKINS. Beautifully shaped buds and double 
flowers with daintily quilled petals of soft salmon-pink on the 
inner surface and deep coppery rose on the reverse, all richly 
Hushed with orange and red. 
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